I am not saying it doesn't exist. I am saying that there is no way in hell that they intentionally made a movie for 114 million dollars (doubled for promotional expense) and didn't want "white men in their 30's-60's" to go see it. Your explanation of target audience vs target market makes sense, but is at odds with your "It's not for adult white men" statement. Studios do not set out to exclude a huge chunk of potential audience. It's also interesting to note that from the very first trailer, Sony did set out to reel in the people you say the movie isn't for. They intentionally marketed it with a false nostalgia angle.But claiming targeting of audiences doesn't exist is ludicrous.
On the flipside, let's not pretend that every "young LGBTQ" audience member connected with it or even liked it.Meanwhile the target audience still saw and enjoyed it as they saw themselves represented on screen in a way that is, unfortunately, rare. People outside that target audience, the more generalized target market, when they did see it, didn't tend to have such a positive reaction to the film because to them it wasn't a special moment connecting with them on a personal level. It was just another movie.
I am not saying it doesn't exist. I am saying that there is no way in hell that they intentionally made a movie for 114 million dollars (doubled for promotional expense) and didn't want "white men in their 30's-60's" to go see it. Your explanation of target audience vs target market makes sense, but is at odds with your "It's not for adult white men" statement. Studios do not set out to exclude a huge chunk of potential audience. It's also interesting to note that from the very first trailer, Sony did set out to reel in the people you say the movie isn't for. They intentionally marketed it with a false nostalgia angle.
That is not to say that a movie can't target the "young LGBTQ audience". You absolutely can. I just disagree with you that it was what happened here. (To be clear, my stance is not that they didn't court that audience. I'm arguing against the idea that they had no interest in people outside that group.)
On the flipside, let's not pretend that every "young LGBTQ" audience member connected with it or even liked it.
Anyway, at the end of the day I'm happy for the people liked it. I didn't and I wish I did, but them's the breaks.![]()
I also said, over and over again, that not being in the target audience doesn't mean Sony didn't want others to watch it - Sony already expected the others to watch it and so targeted a new audience to enlarge it. I'm pretty tired of people in this thread claiming I said things I didn't.
Ghostbusters 2016 wasn't made for white men in their 30's-60's who were the majority fans of the OG Ghostbusters.
If I'm misunderstanding and these two points don't contradict each other then I apologize.
We're only rehashing this old discussion because the OP made two threads in one week ranting against the anti-GB16 ranting. It's not as though a large portion of us were going out of our way to slag on the movie. So, why don't you ask the OP?By the way, where are the other multiple and ranting threads about other beloved 80s movies' reboots which where panned by critics and public, like Robocop and Conan? I don't understand which are the differences here... [/sarcasm]
She was flat out offensive, but no one around her at her old job, or in that film had a fucking clue (or never gave a shit), so its "Leslie, dehumanize yourself as a black woman by screaming at the top of your lungs, and jumping around like you're in a Columbia Short Subject from 1942". Oh yeah, that was just so pleasing to audiences, especially black moviegoers (it was not). ....and Paul Feig had the gall to attack audiences for not liking a film that featured such offensive shit (among other things)? Screw him.
That's kind of Leslie's schtick though (I'd say it more chartiably but..), isn't it? She didn't seem out of character as I've seen her through the years. It seemed to me she and the others (McCarthy/Wiig/McKinnon) stayed pretty close to their bread and butter (slapstick/awkward/goofy).
She's part of the problem to be sure (along with oh-so liberal SNL for giving a venue for that kind of act), but Feig and the producers encouraged that astoundingly offensive routine, and hyped it in the marketing campaign. For all of Feig's self-destructive attacks on the GB fanbase, he had no ground to stand on by directing a modern day screaming minstrel/mammy stereotype. So many black TV audiences & movie goers have long criticized Jones for her routines, but Feig was the one who took it to its most visible level yet without as much as a raised eyebrow about what her performances project to the world.
He's no naive child. Again, screw him.
By the way, where are the other multiple and ranting threads about other beloved 80s movies' reboots which where panned by critics and public, like Robocop and Conan? I don't understand which are the differences here... [/sarcasm]
Sony's failure was saying that everyone who disliked the movie was one of those people and turning the movie into a cultural proxy war. That alienated a lot of people. Feig himself has said this in interviews, citing it as a factor in why it failed.
By the way, where are the other multiple and ranting threads about other beloved 80s movies' reboots which where panned by critics and public, like Robocop and Conan? I don't understand which are the differences here... [/sarcasm]
Hopefully the two threads get merged, making for a massively confusing hybrid.![]()
Err what? It is obvious that I am asking him. I mean, I asked the question in the thread he created. Should I have called him by name explicitly? Send him a private message?We're only rehashing this old discussion because the OP made two threads in one week ranting against the anti-GB16 ranting. It's not as though a large portion of us were going out of our way to slag on the movie. So, why don't you ask the OP?
Elizabeth Banks was quite foolish in some of her remarks, IMO. Before release: “If this movie doesn’t make money it reinforces a stereotype in Hollywood that men don’t go see women do action movies.” No it doesn't, it just means that not enough people in general wanted to see that movie. Based on the amount of money it didn't make, clearly women weren't that interested either. I saw it. It was...okay-ish.This was an issue with the Charlie's Angel's reboot as well.
This was an issue with the Charlie's Angel's reboot as well. I find it distasteful when directors try to blame all the failure on outside factors. You are supposed to learn to take responsibility for your failures in grade school. Passing the buck is the weasels way out..
Elizabeth Banks was quite foolish in some of her remarks, IMO. Before release: “If this movie doesn’t make money it reinforces a stereotype in Hollywood that men don’t go see women do action movies.” No it doesn't, it just means that not enough people in general wanted to see that movie. Based on the amount of money it didn't make, clearly women weren't that interested either.
Ah, sorry, based on your previous posts upthread, I thought you were going the other way there.Err what? It is obvious that I am asking him. I mean, I asked the question in the thread he created. Should I have called him by name explicitly? Send him a private message?
I actually agree that a good deal of the criticism was because women were in the lead roles--that is a common pattern with nearly every movie starring a female lead that has come out in the past few years
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